Strategy sold 32 BTC for $2.5 million in late May, a rare disposal by the largest corporate Bitcoin holder that it disclosed in a June 1, 2026 SEC filing and tied to funding dividends on its preferred stock.
What Happened in Strategy’s 32 BTC Sale
Strategy disclosed in a June 1, 2026 Form 8-K that it sold bitcoin during the window of May 26 through May 31, 2026, at an average price of $77,135 per coin. For related coverage, see Bitcoin Hits 2-Week High as Strategy FUD Fades.
- Strategy sold a small slice of its treasury: the disposal was worth $2.5 million against a multi-billion-dollar stack.
- The proceeds have a stated purpose: funding cash distributions on preferred stock.
- It was pre-signaled, not a reversal: management had already flagged “disciplined” selling days earlier.
The filing says the net proceeds are expected to be used to fund distributions on preferred stock. That framing matters, because it casts the sale as a treasury-management step rather than a bearish call on Bitcoin. For related coverage, see US Bitcoin Treasury Company Sells All BTC Amid Debt and Nasdaq Pressure.
The disposal appears in Strategy’s public purchases ledger as a June 1, 2026 entry of a negative position at $77,135, moving holdings from 843,738 BTC down to their new level. This is the same event that a larger disposal earlier framed as a shift in its Bitcoin playbook foreshadowed on a much smaller scale.
Why the Sale Matters for Bitcoin Watchers
The dollar value is modest, but the signal is not. Strategy built its identity on a no-sale accumulation posture, so any disposal draws attention beyond its size, and secondary coverage described the move as controversial for exactly that reason.
The confirmed facts are narrow: a filing-backed sale, a stated use of proceeds, and an updated holdings figure. Anything beyond that, including whether this marks a broader change in stance, is interpretation rather than established fact.
Sentiment context reinforces the caution. Bitcoin traded around $64,709 at research time, up 3.3% on the day, while the Fear & Greed Index sat at 25, in “Extreme Fear.” A disciplined seller trimming into weak sentiment reads very differently from a forced liquidation.
Strategy’s president Phong Le had already referenced “the disciplined sale of bitcoin” among the transactions reflecting its approach, according to the company’s May 26 press release. That comment, made before the filing, pre-signaled the policy behind the sale.
How This Fits Strategy’s Broader Bitcoin Treasury Story
Strategy remains by far the largest corporate holder of Bitcoin, and the sale barely dents that position. As of May 31, 2026, it held 843,706 BTC acquired for $63.87 billion at an average purchase price of $75,699 per bitcoin.
The same window shows the company still leaning on equity markets: it sold 801,994 MSTR shares for $128.3 million in net proceeds, and its USD reserve rose to $900 million as of May 31, up from the $871 million reported a week earlier.
The sale ties directly to Strategy’s capital structure. The filing says its Variable Rate Series A Perpetual Stretch Preferred Stock (STRC) will pay a June 2026 cash dividend at an annualized 11.50%, payable June 30 to holders of record on June 15. Trimming a sliver of Bitcoin to service preferred dividends fits a treasury that balances accumulation against institutional selling pressure.
Whether this is a one-off adjustment or an early step in a larger rethink is a live debate, echoing arguments that Strategy’s Bitcoin era may be fading. On the evidence available, it reads as a small, policy-driven disposal rather than a change of course.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency and digital asset markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making decisions.